Gaetano Cortese Explained

Gaetano Cortese
Office:Ambassador of Italy to the Netherlands
Term Start:2006
Term End:2009
President:Giorgio Napolitano
Predecessor:Mario Brando Pensa
Successor:Franco Giordano
Office2:Ambassador of Italy to Belgium
Term Start2:1999
Term End2:2003
Predecessor2:Francesco Corrias
Successor2:Massimo Macchia
Birth Date:5 February 1942
Birth Place:Caltanissetta, Italy
Alma Mater:University of Rome - Sapienza
Profession:Diplomat, author

Gaetano Cortese (Caltanissetta, 5 February 1942) is an Italian diplomat and ambassador.

Biography

He graduated in Political Science from the Sapienza University of Rome. He entered the diplomatic career in March 1969 and worked at the General Directorate for Emigration and Social Affairs. In April 1971 he was assigned to the Special Secretariat of the Under-Secretary of State. In March 1972, he was appointed Vice Consul in Zagreb, and in January 1975 he became First Commercial Secretary in Bern. In May 1978, he was assigned to the Italian Embassy in Havana. In 1980, he returned to Rome and served in the General Secretariat of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In 1984, he was transferred to the Italian Embassy in Washington as First Counsellor for Social Affairs, and in 1989 he was sent to Brussels to the Permanent Representation of Italy to the EEC, as First Counsellor and subsequently Minister Counsellor. In 1990, during Italy's six-month presidency of the Council of the European Economic Community, he was in charge of organising all the social events in Italy and abroad for the Minister of Labour and Social Security, Carlo Donat-Cattin. In 1992, he returned to Rome and was released from his post to serve at the Presidency of the Republic as Adjunct Advisor for Press and Information.[1]

From 1999 to 2003 he was Italian Ambassador to Belgium in Brussels; during his diplomatic mission he prepared and successfully completed the State visit of the President of the Republic Carlo Azeglio Ciampi to the Kingdom of Belgium in October 2002.[2] From 2006 to 2009, he was Italian Ambassador to the Netherlands in The Hague and Permanent Representative of Italy to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW).

He retired in March 2009.

He is the founder and editor of the series of volumes on Italian Embassies in the World by the publisher Carlo Colombo, created in 2000 which published numerous volumes to enhance the architectural and artistic heritage of Italian diplomatic missions abroad.[3] The volumes edited are those relating to the Italian diplomatic offices of Washington DC,[4] Berlin,[5] Brussels,[6] Istanbul,[7] The Hague,[8] Oslo,[9] Vienna,[10] Lisbon,[11] Madrid,[12] Cairo,[13] Stockholm,[14] Copenaghen[15] e The Hague.[16]

Awards

In 2016, he was awarded the 'Culture Prize' by the Circolo della Stampa in Milan as 'recognition' for an achievement 'aimed at enhancing the architectural and artistic heritage of Italian diplomatic offices abroad'.[17]

On 19 April 2018, he received the 2018 Artecom-onlus Prize for Culture for his studies and publications aimed at disseminating knowledge of the cultural heritage, both architectural and artistic and ornamental, present in Italian diplomatic premises.[18]

In 2020 he received the 'Special Prize for Culture' as part of the 'Il Poeta Ebbro' prize awarded at the Spoleto Festival.[19]

On 12 September 2020, he was awarded the Prize for the Enhancement of the Italian Diplomatic Library Heritage in Florence as part of the Premium International Florence Seven Stars 2020.[20]

On 25 June 2022, he was awarded the "Il Diplomatico dell'anno 2022" prize (Diplomat of the year) in Florence.[21]

Honours

Grand Officer of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic – April 30, 1999[22]

Publications

References

  1. Web site: Ministero degli Affari esteri, Stati di servizio del personale della Carriera diplomatica che ha cessato di far parte dell'Amministrazione dal 1 gennaio 2000 al 30 maggio 2014 .
  2. Web site: Visita di Stato nel Regno del Belgio. 15-17 ottobre 2002 . quirinale.it. IT.
  3. Web site: Il Ventennale della Collana sulle Ambasciate Italiane nel Mondo (2000-2020) dell’Editore Colombo. Una collana prestigiosissima diretta dall’Ambasciatore Gaetano Cortese.. IT.
  4. Web site: Il Palazzo sul Potomac.L’Ambasciata d’Italia a Washington.
  5. Web site: Il Palazzo sul Tiergarten. L'Ambasciata d'Italia a Berlino .
  6. Web site: Carlo Franza . L’Ambasciatore Gaetano Cortese e “La Residenza di Avenue Legrand” sede dell’Ambasciata d’Italia a Bruxelles.. IT.
  7. Web site: Il Palazzo di Venezia a Istanbul.La Residenza dell’Ambasciatore d’Italia a Istanbul.
  8. Web site: Carlo Franza . Il Palazzo di Sophialaan, Residenza degli Ambasciatori d’Italia presso il Regno dei Paesi Bassi. IT.
  9. Web site: Carlo Franza . La Villa di Inkognitogaten. La Residenza dell’Ambasciatore d’Italia in Norvegia.
  10. Web site: Carlo Franza . Il Palazzo Metternich nel bicentenario del Congresso di Vienna. IT.
  11. Web site: Ambasciata d’Italia a Lisbona nel libro “Il Palazzo dei Conti di Pombeiro” dell’Amb. Gaetano Cortese.
  12. Web site: Il Palazzo dei Marchesi di Amboage, l’Ambasciata d’Italia a Madrid. IT.
  13. Web site: Amb. Cortese scrive storia edificio dell'Ambasciata d'Italia a Il Cairo.
  14. Web site: Carlo Franza . Il Palazzo di Oakhill – L’Ambasciata d’Italia a Stoccolma.
  15. Web site: «Il Palazzo sulla Fredericiagade» dell'Amb. Cortese su Ambasciata d'Italia a Copenaghen.
  16. Web site: La Residenza dell'Ambasciatore d'Italia a L'Aja: in un nuovo "gioiello editoriale".
  17. Web site: Un libro dell'Ambasciatore Gaetano Cortese fa rivivere il Palazzo Venezia di Istanbul . IT.
  18. Web site: Premio Artecom-onlus per la Cultura 2018 . IT.
  19. Web site: E’ andato ad illustri uomini di cultura il premio “Il Poeta Ebbro” assegnato al Festival di Spoleto . IT.
  20. Web site: Assegnato a Firenze il Premium International Florence Seven Stars- 2020. . IT.
  21. Web site: Premium International Florence Seven Stars Edizione 2022 alla Gran Terrazza Belvedere di Firenze . IT.
  22. Web site: Dettaglio decorato Gaetano Cortese. quirinale.it. IT. May 31, 2023.

External links